isBurger is the predicate, and burgerJoints is a new array which is a subset of restaurants. It is important to note that restaurants remained unchanged from the .filter.

Here is a simple example of two lists being rendered—one of the original restaurants array, and one of the filtered burgerJoints array.

See the Pen .filter – isBurger by Adam Giese (@AdamGiese) on CodePen.

Negating Predicates

For every predicate there is an equal and opposite negated predicate.

A predicate is a function that returns a boolean. Since there are only two possible boolean values, that means it is easy to “flip” the value of a predicate.

A few hours have passed since I’ve eaten my burger, and now I’m hungry again. This time, I want to filter out burgers to try something new. One option is to write a new isNotBurger predicate from scratch.

This is better! If the definition of a burger changes, you will only need to change the logic in one place. However, what if we have a number of predicates that we’d like to negate? Since this is something that we’d likely want to do often, it may be a good idea to write a negate function.

In this case, returning a traditional function is necessary because the arguments object is only available on traditional functions.

Returning Predicates

As we saw with our negate function, it is easy for a function to return a new function in JavaScript. This can be useful for writing “predicate creators.” For example, let’s look back at our isBurger and isPizza predicates.

This, to me, is the beauty of arrow functions. In a single line, you can elegantly create a third-order function. isKeyEqualToValue is a function that returns the function isPrice which returns the function isCheap.

See how easy it is to create multiple filtered lists from the original restaurants array?

See the Pen .filter – returning predicates by Adam Giese (@AdamGiese) on CodePen.

Composing Predicates

We can now filter our array by burgers or by a cheap price… but what if you want cheap burgers? One option is to simply chain to filters together.

This is a step in the right direction, but what if you have more than two foods you’d like to include? This isn’t a very scalable approach. There are two built-in array methods that come in handy here. .every and .some are both predicate methods that also accept predicates. .every checks if each member of an array passes a predicate, while .some checks to see if any member of an array passes a predicate.

isEvery and isAny both accept an array of predicates and return a single predicate.

Since all of these predicates are easily created by higher order functions, it isn’t too difficult to create and apply these predicates based on a user’s interaction. Taking all of the lessons we have learned, here is an example of an app that searches restaurants by applying filters based on button clicks.

See the Pen .filter – dynamic filters by Adam Giese (@AdamGiese) on CodePen.

Wrapping up

Filters are an essential part of JavaScript development. Whether you’re sorting out bad data from an API response or responding to user interactions, there are countless times when you would want a subset of an array’s values. I hope this overview helped with ways that you can manipulate predicates to write more readable and maintainable code.